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NEW BOOK AND LAUNCH EVENT:

THE RETURN OF THE PUBLIC

By Dan Hind

Published October 11th, 2010

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"A book marked by a sombre and scathing rhetoric that recalls the Frankfurt 
School critique of thinkers such as Adorno and Marcuse... Pointed, eloquent and 
forceful."  Boyd Tonkin, INDEPENDENT


"If there is a future to look forward to, it will come from the invigorated 
public domain pictured by Dan Hind ... This is a handbook for a very modern 
liberation struggle. Buy it and help set yourself free." -Andrew Simms, Policy 
Director, New Economics Foundation and author of Tescopoly


"A brilliant, provocative and sweeping assessment of our current predicament 
... this is a book that deserves widespread attention and debate." - Robert W. 
McChesney, Gutgsell Endowed Professor in the Department of Communication, 
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and author of Communication Revolution



"Dan Hind provides us with the strategies we will need to reinvigorate the 
public debate and, in so doing, re-empower the people. Go to Mapquest and ask 
for directions to the next and better society; the response will be Dan Hind's 
The Return of the Public." - John Nichols, political correspondent of the 
Nation and author of The Genius of Impeachment



"As the official culture of politics limps from scandal to corruption, Hind 
turns to the only thing that can save democracy: the people. Dan Hind has 
produced one of those rare books that transcend the world of "discourse" and 
become essential levers of historical change." - David Miller, co-author of A 
Century of Spin and professor of sociology at the University of Strathclyde


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LAUNCH EVENT

Monday 25 October, 7pm at Kings Place, London:

The Return of the Public: Journalism and Democracy in the 21st Century

Dan Hind in conversation with Professor Natalie Fenton, chaired by Tony Curzon 
Price, editor-in-Chief of openDemocracy<http://www.opendemocracy.net/>


For decades, the public has been told to leave democracy to the experts. But is 
it not apparent that our politicians have ever-decreasing legitimacy? Even as 
they amass ever more riches our financiers are now morally and intellectually 
bankrupt. In their different ways politicians and those who control the private 
economy system claim to be acting in the public interest.

Yet we, the public, have little say in decision-making and almost no power to 
change the terms of a series of increasingly absurd debates about economic and 
foreign policy. How have we been excluded from so many discussions about the 
public interest?

Dan Hind is in conversation with Professor Natalie Fenton about public 
commissioning: a controversial way forwards for a new participatory politics, 
one based on the wholesale reform of the media

For more information and to book:
http://www.kingsplace.co.uk/spoken-word/words-on-monday/the-return-of-the-public-journalism-and-democracy-dan-hind-in-conversati

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Eloquent exploration of the public's exclusion from political participation.

Our politicians have ever-decreasing legitimacy. Even as they amass ever more 
riches our financiers are now morally and intellectually bankrupt. In their 
different ways politicians and those who control the private economy system 
claim to be acting in the public interest. Yet we, the public, have little say 
in decision-making and almost no power to change the terms of a series of 
increasingly absurd debates about economic and foreign policy. How have we been 
excluded from so many discussions about the public interest?

Dan Hind traces how, historically, political and intellectual elites 
constructed deeply ambiguous ideas of the public, designed to serve their own 
ends and preserve the status quo. After the Second World War, as women, ethnic 
minorities, the young, and the working majority became more assertive and 
self-confident, the propertied and their allies in the state made fresh 
attempts to deny most of us a public identity. The financial crisis, and the 
ability of those who caused it to preside over policy-making in its aftermath, 
have made it impossible to ignore what has long been obvious: the institutions 
on which most of us rely for our knowledge of the wider world have become 
radically and demonstrably unaccountable and unsafe.

For decades, the public has been told to leave democracy to the experts. Now, 
Hind outlines a way forwards for a new participatory politics, one based on the 
wholesale reform of the media. After the failure of the private, now is the 
time for the return of the public.

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DAN HIND was a publisher for ten years. In 2009 he left the industry to develop 
a program of media reform centred around public commissioning. His journalism 
has appeared in the Guardian, New Scientist, Lobster and the Times Literary 
Supplement. His first book, The Threat to Reason, was published by Verso in 
2007.

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ISBN: 978 1 84467 594 4 / £14.99 / $24.95

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For more information and to buy the book visit:

http://www.versobooks.com/books/478-the-return-of-the-public

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Visit Verso's new website for information on our upcoming events, new reviews 
and publications and special offers: 
http://www.versobooks.com<http://www.versobooks.com/>

And get updates on Twitter too! http://twitter.com/VersoBooksUK

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